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Dorothy Ashby
Birth name Dorothy Jeanne Thompson
Born August 6, 1932(1932-08-06)
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
Died April 13, 1986(1986-04-13) (aged 53)
Santa Monica, California, U.S.
Genres Jazz
Occupations Musician
Instruments Harp, piano

Dorothy Ashby (August 6, 1932 — April 13, 1986) was an American jazz harpist and composer.[1]

Along with Alice Coltrane, Ashby extended the popularization of jazz harp past a novelty, showing how the instrument can be utilized seamlessly as much a bebop instrument as the saxophone. Her albums were of the jazz genre, but often moved into R&B, world and other musics, especially on her 1970 album The Rubaiyat of Dorothy Ashby, where she demonstrates her talents on another instrument, the Japanese koto, successfully integrating it into jazz.

Her musical legacy is great; music from her albums has been sampled numerously by hip hop musicians, ensuring her sound is heard often, though she is seldom recognized for her important contributions. Though marginalized by her singular instrument, Ashby is now recognized as a true musician of great skill and creativity.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Born as Dorothy Jeanne Thompson in 1932, she grew up around music in Detroit where her father, guitarist Wiley Thompson, often brought home fellow jazz musicians. Even as a young girl, Dorothy would provide support and background to their music by playing the piano. She attended Cass Technical High School where fellow students included such future musical talents and jazz greats as Donald Byrd, Gerald Wilson, and Kenny Burrell. While in high school she played a number of instruments (including the saxophone and string bass) before coming upon the harp.

She attended Wayne State University in Detroit where she studied piano and music education. After she graduated, she began playing the piano in the jazz scene in Detroit, though by 1952 she had made the harp her main instrument. At first her fellow jazz musicians were resistant to the idea of adding the harp, which they perceived as an instrument of classical music and also somewhat ethereal in sound, into jazz performances. So Ashby overcame their initial resistance and built up support for the harp as a jazz instrument by organizing free shows and playing at dances and weddings with her trio. She recorded with Ed Thigpen, Richard Davis, Frank Wess and others in the late 1950s and early 1960s. During the 1960s, she also had her own radio show in Detroit.

Ashby's trio, including her husband, John Ashby, on drums, regularly toured the country, recording albums for several different record labels. She played with Louis Armstrong and Woody Herman, among others. In 1962 Down Beat magazine's annual poll of best jazz performers included Ashby. Extending her range of interests and talents, she also worked with her husband on a theater company, the Ashby Players, which her husband founded in Detroit, and for which Dorothy often wrote the scores.

In the 1960s Dorothy Ashby, together with her husband, John Ashby formed a theatrical group to produce plays that would be relevant to the African American community of Detroit, Mich. This production group went by several names depending on the theater production. The group was most commonly called the Ashby Players or the Ashby's, but the production company also went by the names Aid to Creative Arts, Artists Productions, and the Ashby Players of Detroit.

They created a series of theatrical musical plays that Dorothy and John Ashby produced together as this theatrical company, The Ashby Players. In the case of most of the plays, John Ashby wrote the scripts and Dorothy Ashby wrote the music and lyrics to all the songs in the plays. Dorothy Ashby also played harp and piano on the soundtracks to all of her plays. She starred in the production of the play "3-6-9" herself. Most of the music that she wrote for these plays is available only on a handful of the reel to reel tapes that Dorothy Ashby recorded herself. Only a couple of the many songs she created for her plays later appeared on LPs that she released. Later in her career, she would record records and perform concerts primarily to raise money for the Ashby Players theatrical productions.

[edit] California

The theatrical production group “The Ashby Players" not only produced black theater in Detroit and Canada but provided early theatrical and acting opportunities for black actors, Ernie Hudson (of Ghostbusters 1 and 2; credited as Earnest L. Hudson) was a featured actor in the Artists Productions version of the play “3-6-9”. In the late 1960s, the Ashbys gave up touring and settled in California where Dorothy broke into the studio recording system as a harpist through the help of the soul singer Bill Withers, who recommended her to Stevie Wonder. As a result, she was called upon for a number of studio sessions playing for such popular recording artists as Dionne Warwick, Diana Ross, Earth, Wind & Fire, and Barry Manilow. Her harp playing is featured in the song "Come Live With Me' which is on the soundtrack for the 1967 movie, Valley of the Dolls.

[edit] Death

Ashby died from cancer on April 13, 1986 in Santa Monica, California, aged 53.

[edit] Tribute

The High Llamas recorded a song entitled "Dorothy Ashby" on their 2007 album Can Cladders.

[edit] Discography

[edit] As leader

[edit] As sideman

With Gene Harris

With Freddie Hubbard

With Bobbi Humphrey

With Wade Marcus

With Billy Preston

With Stevie Wonder

With Sonny Criss

  • Warm and Sonny (1977)

With Osamu Kitajima

  • The Source (1984)

[edit] References

[edit] External links


527 videos foundNext > 

Dorothy Ashby - Soul Vibrations

amazing tune by the late Dorothy Ashby - from her album "Afro-Harping"

Dorothy Ashby - The Moving Finger

Infinite grooves from Dorothy Ashby from "The Rubaiyat of Dorothy Ashby" on Dusty Groove Records. www.dustygroove.com www.myspace.com

Dorothy Ashby - The Windmills of your Mind

Sampled by Rahzel's "All i know" and Common's "Start the show"

Dorothy Ashby - By The Time I Get To Phoenix

From "Dorothy's Harp". Enjoy!

Dorothy Ashby Afro Harping

Sorry! Th video is to long. The tune is 2.59.

There's a Small Hotel - Dorothy Ashby

There's a Small Hotel - Dorothy Ashby (with Frank Wess) From "Hip Harp" (Prestige, 1958) Dorothy Ashby's version of the Hart/Rodgers standard

Dorothy Ashby - For Some We Loved

Dorothy Ashby - For Some We Loved, album Jazz for Meditation (2007) - Created with AquaSoft SlideShow for YouTube: www.aquasoft.net

Dorothy Ashby - Drink

Album: Rubaiyat of Dorothy Ashby YESTERDAY This Day's Madness did prepare; TO-MORROW's Silence, Triumph, or Despair: Drink! for you not know whence you came, nor why: Drink! for you know not why you go, nor where. And we, that now make merry in the Room They left, and Summer dresses in new Bloom, Ourselves must we beneath the Couch of Earth Descend, ourselves to make a Couch—for whom? (From RUBAIYAT OF OMAR KHAYYAM)

Dorothy Ashby - Myself When Young

The Rubaiyat Of Dorothy Ashby (Cadet Records, 1970)

Dorothy Ashby - Essence Of Sapphire

The Fantastic Jazz Harp Of Dorothy Ashby

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